PLEASE READ BEFORE POSTING
Hello Forumites! In order to help keep the Forum a useful, safe and friendly place for our users, discussions around non-MoneySaving matters are not permitted per the Forum rules. While we understand that mentioning house prices may sometimes be relevant to a user's specific MoneySaving situation, we ask that you please avoid veering into broad, general debates about the market, the economy and politics, as these can unfortunately lead to abusive or hateful behaviour. Threads that are found to have derailed into wider discussions may be removed. Thank you for your understanding.Energy Price Cap announcement: Watch Martin Lewis explain what it means for your electricity and gas bills this winter
MSE News: Stamp duty bill for average properties in Scotland to be slashed

531 Posts


Home buyers in Scotland purchasing properties worth up to £135,000 won't pay stamp duty from April 2015
Read the full story:
Stamp duty bill for average properties in Scotland to be slashed

Click reply below to discuss. If you haven’t already, join the forum to reply. If you aren’t sure how it all works, read our New to Forum? Intro Guide.
Stamp duty bill for average properties in Scotland to be slashed

Click reply below to discuss. If you haven’t already, join the forum to reply. If you aren’t sure how it all works, read our New to Forum? Intro Guide.
0
This discussion has been closed.
Latest MSE News and Guides
Replies
Average stamp duty is of course not being slashed, and it's going up quite a lot on some properties.
Stamp duty will be less for most house buyers and only will be more for those buying houses over £325k- is that not correct?
Will the measures be counter productive though? Far easier for those with money to walk. What's next on the agenda. From what is so obviously a Government with a far left of centre philosophy.
All they have to do is to make it work like income tax, which the new Scottish system seems to do.
Stepping back, you could say somewhere to live is a basic human right, so if basic food stuff should not be taxed, then neither should a house, up to a sensible threshold. For London, I would say houses below £500k should be free from stamp duty.
Stamp duty for the average-priced house will go down. Any purchase over £324k will attract higher duty. The average house price in Scotland is probably half that.
Lots of houses in London worth MORE than £500k.
Instead of mansion tax, 10% stamp duty on houses worth more than £2million, instead of 4%.
Currently, one principal private residence is exempt from CGT to an unlimited amount. We can make it a fixed allowance, like the £325k IHT (inheritance) threshold. So, you bought a house 20 years ago for £100k, which is now worth £500k, so the gain is £400k. If the fixed allowance is £350k, you pay CGT on £50k. A person who made £1 million in gains, would pay CGT on £650k.
Almost. £154k or so.
Stamp duty is 7% on properties over £2 million, not 4%.
http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/sdlt/rates-tables.htm
So it is. I stand corrected.
Really need to check it more often. Hmm, probably won't.